I admire your optimism.
I was choosing to ignore Murpy's Law.
Murphy has followed me where ever I have gone or done, my entire life. Examples, recently lost my job, and both my computer and dryer quit within a week. Murphy is a Mofo, for sure. Always optimistic, though. Borrowed a computer and hang my clothes up to dry. Still no job, though. Hopefully by February...
Sorry to hear about your job. I can relate. In Nov 2013 after 26 years at the same company I lost my job. I had to move from Colorado Springs to Austin but was able to find a great job at Apple. So my advice is search aggressively, use your contacts, be willing to move and hang in there.
Back to the eco indicator, my 08 doesn't have it. I do wish it had the eco mode selector, though. Hear that mode increases mileage, without changing riding habits. tp
It is FEAM (Fuel Economy Assistance Mode) or "FEA" mode selector, technically (not that it matters, everyone just says "eco mode"). It does improve economy slightly- by about 10% or so based on past general feedback from the members. To me, it is not enough to really care one way or the other about but I suppose on really long trips it might help with overall expense a little.Thanks. Even with a 5 MPG improvement, it adds almost 30 miles to a tank. After a while it's like a free fill up. On my 08, riding sanely, I get around 42MPG. Against the wind at 80+, down to around 37. Still better than my XB, that's for sure. Around 25-40%. . .tp
I've never seen my mileage average above 35 MPG. Usually 32.something.
I have a PCV that leans it out just about everywhere across the board, so I don't bother with the second map for fear of running too lean. I never noticed much difference in mileage when using it on trips before mapping it. I've never seen my mileage average above 35 MPG. Usually 32.something.
I've burned a tank of fuel in an hour in the Texas Hill Country. She was pinned most of the time, with my Wife on the back.
It does improve economy slightly- by about 10% or soI bet it's a lot less than that. Vehicles already run borderline lean due to emissions regulations; basically negligible, as several owners have stated. Plus it's overridden above 30% throttle, 4K rpm, and forgot which other parameters, so on a trip, it'd rarely kick in anyway.
I bet it's a lot less than that. Vehicles already run borderline lean due to emissions regulations; basically negligible, as several owners have stated. Plus it's overridden above 30% throttle, 4K rpm, and forgot which other parameters, so on a trip, it'd rarely kick in anyway.Had an 03RT, a 12RT, and now an 04RT, in fact, the one I could not keep up with on the Sisters. Traded my 12 and its payments for the 04. RT's are much easier to take through the twisties than the 14. May be the tire size and profile differences, but the 04 is such a neutral handler at speed, any top end loss is made up in the turns. I still like riding the 14 more, but we don't have really twisty roads in my locale. Heard the FJR is still a little buzzy, and limited with a 5 speed, but I would like to ride one a while to see.
Hey Tomp, so the RT has better cornering clearance than the C14? I had a 2014 RT that gave back to BMW due to the recall. Took it to the twisties once, and could take them as fast as on the sportier K1300S, with both almost dragging pegs the way I like to ride on the streets. I remember my 2007 FJR touching way earlier, but with the new Gen3, that supposedly got better. Hope the C14 is more like the RT and less than the FJR... although on most comparos I've seen, the C14 is slammed as the worst handler (and heavy-steerer) of them all, and the Gen3 FJR as the best. Who knows. Let me know your more detailed impressions:). Thanks.